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World / Americas

NYC-to-Dallas Southwest jet is forced to land with engine damage

Published: 17 Apr 2018 - 08:10 pm | Last Updated: 23 Nov 2021 - 01:07 pm
Peninsula

Bloomberg

A Southwest Airlines Co. jetliner made an emergency landing in Philadelphia after an engine blew out on the Boeing Co. 737-700.

The cabin depressurized when engine debris broke a window, according to an NBC affiliate. A woman was drawn toward the hole, the affiliate said, citing a relative of a passenger. The plane landed safely.

Southwest said the flight, which was bound for Dallas from New York’s LaGuardia airport, had 143 customers and five crew members. The airline said it was in the process of transporting them to the terminal.

The National Transportation Safety Board said in a tweet it was aware of the incident and was gathering information. The NTSB investigates the most serious engine failures and conducted a probe of another Southwest engine issue in 2016.

Reports of shrapnel shattering a window suggest that the engine broke apart in what is known as an "uncontained” failure. U.S. regulations require engines to be covered in tough casings designed to prevent metal from flying into fuel tanks and passenger areas if an engine breaks apart.